JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli troops killed a suspected Palestinian
militant in a West Bank refugee camp early Wednesday as he tried to
escape, the army said.

It marked the second time in two days that soldiers killed a wanted
man during an attempted arrest, prompting complaints by Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat that the world is turning a blind eye to Israeli
actions in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

´´I ask the world why it is silent when crimes are being committed
against the Palestinian people in this holy land,´´ Arafat told
reporters.

Also Wednesday, Israeli troops arrested two dozen Palestinians,
including 12 suspected Islamic militants. Among those arrested in the
town of Tulkarem was an activist in the Islamic Jihad group who had
planned an attack on Israelis, the army said.

In the Balata refugee camp, adjoining the city of Nablus, soldiers
killed suspected militant Osama Badra, 28, as he tried to escape. An
army spokeswoman said that after a search of the man´s three-story
home turned up nothing he was spotted on the roof. Soldiers called on
him to give himself up and fired warning shots, but when he tried to
flee he was shot and killed, she said.

There were conflicting reports on whether Badra was a member of
Islamic Jihad or the Al Aqsa Martyrs´ Brigade, a militia linked to
Arafat. The lines between factions are often blurred, and dozens of
armed men have quit the poorly funded Al Aqsa militia in recent weeks
to join Islamic Jihad, which gets money from Iran.

On Tuesday, a Hamas activist was killed in similar circumstances in
Gaza.

A Palestinian court on Tuesday ordered the release of the central
figure in a huge seaborne arms shipment intercepted by Israel, but a
senior Israeli official hinted he would be hunted down if he is
freed.

Fuad Shobaki, a senior financial official in the Palestinian
Authority, has been held in a Palestinian lockup in the desert oasis
of Jericho since May. Israel charges that he was the mastermind of
the arms shipment on board the Karine A, commandeered by the Israeli
navy in the Red Sea in January.

At first, Arafat denied that the 50 tons of arms on the ship were
meant for his Palestinian Authority, but later he backtracked on the
denial. The huge shipment, which included machine guns, rockets,
mortars and explosives — all banned under interim peace deals with
Israel — contributed to a U.S. policy shift away from Arafat´s
regime.

The Palestinian Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that there was no
evidence that Shobaki was involved in the arms shipment. However, his
lawyer, Hussein Shiyoukhi, asked Palestinian officials to keep
Shobaki where he is for now, ´´until we can settle the whole issue
with other parties,´´ referring to Israel, the United States and
Britain.

Shobaki was among the people marooned in Arafat´s Ramallah
headquarters for several weeks while Israeli tanks maintained a
siege. In the end, an agreement was reached under which Shobaki and
others wanted by Israel were transported to Jericho under the
supervision of British and U.S. jailers, in exchange for ending the
siege.

If Shobaki is freed, that would violate the agreement, said Raanan
Gissin, a senior aide to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, indicating that
Israel would hunt for him. (Copyright 2002 Associated Press. 12/11/02)